some of the guys in the bug thread are reporting issues with the Shuffle mode, all I need my DAP to do is shuffle music and MAYBE I WOULD FREAKING LOVE some Folder Structure play ability, you know select a folder and play everything inside of it including all sub folders

Hmm...I really have to bang the drum for the DX90 in regards to it's usability. OK, it's not perfect (what UI is??) at this stage but if you have a qiute decent folder structure and/or a good file-tagging, you won't have any troubles. So far my DX90 never froze or showed an odd behaviour^^

What doesn't work on the UI of the DX90? I load the music. Can go by one of two methods to the music, go to the album, pick the song, it plays. There are many other functions as well but it all works. They will also have a new FW in a day or two for little things. Its all good.

Any time I connect my DX90 to the USB 3.0 port on my Lenovo T420 (Windows 7 64bit) I get a popup asking "Do you want to scan and fix ..."

After I click on "Scan and Fix (recommended)", it tells me that it did not find any error.

This does not happen when I connect the DX90 to the USB 2.0 port on the same laptop.

My DX50 did not show any problem when connected to the same USB 3.0 port.

Thanks!

I get that B$ message from Win7 on loads of different USB storage devices. Windows is flawed, flawed, flawed, so please don't let it concern you about the DX90 itself.

I do notice that Win7 doesn't like a USB device being connected that has more than one memory chip, if the device in question is set to operate in 'MSC' mode, but tends to behave itself better if the device is set to 'MTP' mode. It happens like that with my Cowon J3 DAP, for example (32gb onboard memory + a 64gb MicroSD card)

But I just don't worry about it - I tell Win7 to shut-up every time it B$s me about needing to 'scan and fix', and I always decline the option to go ahead and 'scan & fix'. I would never trust Microsoft to 'fix' any storage device error - they're disgracefully incompetent. I was once told, by a programmer, that Windows Checkdisk (which tries to run during boot-up, if a Windows machine has been shutdown too quickly) simply deletes any truncated entries on the file structure table, rather than doing what any responsible program would do and either back up the truncated entries or attempt to actually fix them.

Seriously - NEVER allow Microsoft to check or alter any of your disks or files.

i have a problem :
i have formatted per error, the internal memory of my DX90, on mac os.
i wanted to format the micro sd external card.
since, when i connect the DX90 to my mac, the internal memory is not visible, it can not be seen.
what shall i do now ?

i have a problem :
i have formatted per error, the internal memory of my DX90, on mac os.
i wanted to format the micro sd external card.
since, when i connect the DX90 to my mac, the internal memory is not visible, it can not be seen.
what shall i do now ?

reset factory, but nothing !!!
use pc windows 7 pro, nothing

need help please

sam

First things first; try completely removing the memory card, and then try a factory reset.

Any time I connect my DX90 to the USB 3.0 port on my Lenovo T420 (Windows 7 64bit) I get a popup asking "Do you want to scan and fix ..."

After I click on "Scan and Fix (recommended)", it tells me that it did not find any error.

This does not happen when I connect the DX90 to the USB 2.0 port on the same laptop.

My DX50 did not show any problem when connected to the same USB 3.0 port.

Thanks!

I had that happen when I initially got the unit. I was plugged into USB 2. I let Windows fix it and haven't had it happen since. In theory, you could get that if you don't do an eject before unplugging the DX90 from USB. This is similar to any USB stick; Windows may have write cache turned (or a write operation that hasn't finished) and it'll mark the disk dirty.

I had that happen when I initially got the unit. I was plugged into USB 2. I let Windows fix it and haven't had it happen since. In theory, you could get that if you don't do an eject before unplugging the DX90 from USB. This is similar to any USB stick; Windows may have write cache turned (or a write operation that hasn't finished) and it'll mark the disk dirty.